Lately, though, gold doesn't seem like it can catch a bid.
"Despite the continued reverberations regarding the Cyprus bailout and its involvement of bank deposits, gold struggled to maintain the positive momentum created in the first two weeks of March and instead now looks very likely to move lower, towards $1580/oz," wrote Deutsche Bank commodities analyst Xiao Fu in a note this morning.
So, what does Faber have to say about it?
This morning, on Bloomberg Surveillance with Tom Keene and Alix Steel, Dr. Doom was asked why gold wasn't holding up.
Here's his explanation:
When
you print money, the money does not flow evenly into the economic
system. It stays essentially in the financial service industry and among
people that have access to these funds, mostly well-to-do people. It
does not go to the worker. I just mentioned that it doesn't flow evenly
into the system.
Now
from time to time it will lift the NASDAQ like between 1997 and March
2000. Then it lifted home prices in the U.S. until 2007. Then it lifted
the commodity prices in 2008 until July 2008 when the global economy was
already in recession. More recently it has lifted selected emerging
economies, stock markets in Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand, up four
times from 2009 lows and now the U.S.
So we
are creating bubbles and bubbles and bubbles. This bubble will come to
an end. My concern is that we are going to have a systemic crisis where
it is going to be very difficult to hide. Even in gold, it will be
difficult to hide.
Faber is, of course, still bearish on U.S. stocks. He told Bloomberg that he sees "considerable downside risk" in the market.
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